A mountaineering guide’s harrowing survival after being left for dead on Mount Everest has laid bare systemic safety failures within British-run expedition companies, raising urgent questions about regulation and accountability in the world’s most perilous industry.
The guide, a 34-year-old Nepali named Pemba Sherpa, was discovered alive after spending two nights at an altitude above 8,000 metres — the so-called ‘death zone’ — following a fall near the Hillary Step on May 12. Rescue teams initially believed him deceased, a misconception that nearly cost him his life. He is now recovering in a Kathmandu hospital with severe frostbite and a punctured lung.
This incident, while extraordinary in its outcome, is emblematic of a broader crisis. British-run expeditions, which dominate the peak’s climbing seasons, have faced increasing scrutiny over cost-cutting measures that compromise safety. Industry insiders, speaking on condition of anonymity, describe a culture where profit margins take precedence over meticulous planning and client welfare.
“The race to summit has become a race to the bottom,” said Dr. Rachel Holloway, a former expedition doctor and now a lecturer in outdoor safety at the University of Leeds. “Companies are offering ‘budget climbs’ that skip essential acclimatisation rotations, use older oxygen cylinders, and hire inexperienced guides. It’s a ticking time bomb.”
Pemba’s ordeal began when his client, a British businessman with limited high-altitude experience, lost their footing on a fixed line. The pair tumbled 300 metres into a crevasse. While the client sustained minor injuries and was rescued within hours, Pemba’s fall was more severe. He landed on a ledge, unconscious, with a fractured leg. Expedition leaders, believing his chance of survival nil, radioed base camp to declare him dead and continued the ascent.
“They left him. No attempt at a rescue. No shout even,” said Tenzing Norgay’s grandson, Tashi Sherpa, a leading advocate for guide rights. “This man’s survival is a miracle. But it should be a wake-up call.”
Britain’s Adventure Activities Licensing Authority (AALA) regulates adventure tourism within the UK but has no jurisdiction over foreign expeditions. This regulatory gap allows companies to operate with minimal oversight. In the 2023 season alone, five British-run expeditions were cited by Nepali authorities for violating safety protocols, yet none faced sanctions.
“The industry is self-policing, and it’s failing,” said former Everest summiteer and safety campaigner Mark Jenkins. “We need binding international standards. A universal code for high-altitude guiding that covers insurance, communication equipment, and mandatory rescue plans.”
Nepal’s tourism department has proposed new rules requiring all expeditions to carry satellite phones and supplementary oxygen for all members, but implementation has been slow. British companies argue that additional regulation would increase costs and reduce accessibility.
“Climbing Everest should never be a right; it’s a privilege that demands respect,” Jenkins added. “If you can’t afford a safe expedition, you cannot afford to go. The mountain will always be there. Your life won’t.”
Pemba Sherpa’s story has ignited a global conversation. Social media campaigns are calling for a boycott of unregistered British operators, while a parliamentary petition in London has garnered 50,000 signatures demanding a review of AALA’s remit.
For now, Pemba focuses on recovery. “I am alive. That is enough,” he said from his hospital bed. But his eyes betray a deeper truth: the system that put him in that crevasse remains unchanged. The next guide might not be so lucky.








